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Politics : Sioux Nation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: cirrus who wrote (187682)3/5/2010 9:27:05 PM
From: SiouxPal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361936
 
Last night I heard an awesome compliment about you.
Right on the phone.
Thank you for being here.
Quality over quantity.

I am Sioux, and at thymes Chuck



To: cirrus who wrote (187682)3/5/2010 9:49:49 PM
From: Rock_nj  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 361936
 
The acceleration issue can be a problem when you're in heavy traffic and you go to hit the brake because cars ahead of you are stopping and your car keeps going. Sure, if you had time to react you could shift to neutral, you'd be okay, but when you're going 65 MPH, how much time do you have to react? It's a big enough deal that it needs to be fixed. The problem with Toyota is that they have hemmed and hawed and let it fester into a big story. Even with the fixes they've come up with the problem may not be fixed. If they just dealt with it head on, it would not be a big deal.



To: cirrus who wrote (187682)3/6/2010 12:41:10 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361936
 
Alexi Giannoulias & kin could walk away from Broadway Bank collapse with $15 million
_______________________________________________________________

By Steve Daniels
March 05, 2010
Crain's Chicago Business

(Crain's) — The family of Democratic U.S. Senate nominee Alexi Giannoulias stands to collect more than $10 million in federal tax refunds even if its Broadway Bank fails, which Mr. Giannoulias said this week is likely.

A $75-million loss at the struggling lender last year generated tax benefits potentially worth between $12 million and $15 million to Mr. Giannoulias, his two brothers and his mother. As the sole owners of a subchapter S corporation that controls $1.2-billion-asset Broadway, they pay the taxes on the bank’s income and reap tax deductions on its losses.

The possibility of family members pocketing millions in tax refunds as Broadway slides toward insolvency and federal receivership is likely to fuel more controversy for Mr. Giannoulias, who is already under fire for his role in the bank’s downfall. In an interview this week, he took some responsibility for a disastrous expansion of real estate lending when he was senior lender at Broadway in the mid-2000s, before winning election as Illinois treasurer in 2006.

Asked whether he would advise his family to put the tax refunds back into the bank to help recapitalize it, Mr. Giannoulias said, “We’ll do everything we can to keep the bank going. . . .You’ll have to ask management of the bank what the best course of action is.”

In an e-mailed statement, CEO Demetris Giannoulias, the Senate candidate’s older brother, said, “If the amount of capital at our disposal were enough to meet the full amount outlined by the (Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.), we would gladly supply it because we believe in the assets and long-term prospects of the bank. Importantly, we have told all potential investors that we are willing to contribute funds alongside their investment.”

But the tax refunds won’t be nearly enough to keep Broadway solvent. Demetris Giannoulias has said Broadway needs at least $85 million to survive and that the family would be willing to provide 10% to 20% of that total in cash, or $8.5 million to $17 million. Add a $15-million refund to the top end of that range, and the combined $32 million isn’t even half the amount Broadway needs.

If, as Alexi Giannoulias said this week, the bank is likely to fail, the family could walk away with millions in tax refunds while the FDIC’s insurance fund absorbs what likely would be hundreds of millions in losses from Broadway’s collapse. That fund is backed by premiums levied on banks but can tap taxpayers for help if it runs short of funds. Its reserves are dwindling as real estate losses bring down banks across the country, including 14 in the Chicago area since 2008.

The expected tax refund comes on top of $70 million in dividends the family took from Broadway’s holding company in 2007 and 2008. Alexi Giannoulias says $40 million of that went to pay taxes and the rest was invested, partly in real estate assets and a New York bank. He says the family took the dividends to diversify its wealth and didn’t foresee the depth of the financial crisis to come.

Similar scenarios are likely to play out at numerous other closely held banks felled by the real estate collapse. “We’re going to see more situations like this. These losses will be flowing back to the shareholders,” says Richard Lieberman, tax partner at Burke Warren MacKay & Serritella P.C. in Chicago.

The actual amount of any tax refund due Giannoulias family members won’t be determined until the IRS reviews their tax returns. On paper, they appear to be eligible for $24 million to $31 million in refunds, based on rules that permit banks to recover taxes paid over the previous five years to compensate for current losses, says Tim Kosiek, a partner at accounting firm Baker Tilly LLP in Chicago who specializes in banks.

But trusts established to hold much of the family’s Broadway stock after the 2006 death of founder Alexis Giannoulias will reduce the refund, according to Demetris Giannoulias. “Tax laws restrict the availability of carry-back provisions for the trusts set up in mid-2007, after my father’s death,” he says. “Any tax refund is likely to be approximately half of what would be available to a corporation not owned by these trusts.”



To: cirrus who wrote (187682)3/6/2010 1:36:04 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361936
 
Why Military Keynesianism is NOT the Solution

by Heidi Garrett-Peltier /

Published on Friday, March 5, 2010 by Dollars & Sense

The United States is currently preparing to send 30,000 additional troops to Afghanistan by summer 2010. Military contractors, deeply integrated into the U.S. economy, will continue to prosper and profit from increased military spending resulting from this surge of troops. At a time when unemployment in the domestic economy remains near 10%, it may seem convenient to fall back on the principle of military Keynesianism: War is good for the economy.

John Maynard Keynes, the British economist whose work has once again become popular in the wake of this most recent economic crisis, advocated increased government spending to lift an economy out of recession or depression. When consumers and businesses slow their spending, the government can step in to increase demand for goods and services so that businesses can continue to produce and people can remain employed. This fiscal stimulus could take the form of infrastructure projects, healthcare, education, or other productive endeavors. By this logic, military spending can lift an economy out of recession by creating demand for goods and services provided by military contractors, such as the production of tanks and ammunition or the provision of security services. Advocates of this strategy point not only to the widespread employment created by military spending, but also claim that military spending creates well-paying, stable jobs.

It is true that military spending creates jobs throughout the economy, and that many of those jobs are well-paying. But at a time when our jobless rate is high, infrastructure is crumbling, and global climate change is becoming an increasingly urgent matter, we must ask whether military spending is truly a solution to our economic woes or whether we might be able to create more jobs in productive areas that also help us meet longer-term goals.

In a recent paper that I co-authored with Robert Pollin, we show that dollar per dollar, more jobs are created through spending on clean energy, health care, and education than on the military. Further, we show that more middle-income and well-paying jobs are created in all of these areas. For each $1 billion of spending, over 17,000 jobs would be created in clean energy, close to 20,000 in health care, and over 29,000 in education. That same $1 billion would create only 11,600 jobs as a result of military spending. If we look at well-paying jobs, those that pay over $64,000 per year, these alternative domestic spending areas also outperform military spending. The same $1 billion would create 1,500 well-paying jobs in clean energy and just over 1,000 in the military-clean energy creates 50% more good jobs than military spending. Education, which is labor-intensive and creates many well-paying jobs per dollar of expenditure, creates close to 2,500 jobs paying over $64,000-that's 2.5 times as many as the military.

According to the National Priorities Project, military spending on the Iraq and Afghanistan wars has reached approximately $1 trillion since 2001, not including the cost of the surge of 30,000 troops. In fiscal year 2009, federal government outlays on the military were 17% of all outlays.

Meanwhile, energy, resource conservation, and the environment accounted for only 1% of federal outlays, while education, training, and social services made up only 2%. Military spending is therefore eight to seventeen times as high as federal education- and energy-related spending.

The Obama administration is facing increased pressure to reduce the size of the fiscal deficit and the national debt, both of which have grown partly as a result of military spending. At the same time, there is an urgent need to put people back to work and to move the country toward a low-carbon future. While military Keynesianism offers one strategy for recovering from the recession, it is by no means the most effective, even putting aside the other reasons for objecting to a war economy. By reducing military spending, we can channel some of those savings to clean energy, healthcare, education, and other matters of national and global importance.

*Heidi Garrett-Peltier is a research fellow at the Political Economy Research Institute at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

© 2010 Dollars & Sense

commondreams.org



To: cirrus who wrote (187682)3/6/2010 3:38:50 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361936
 
Orszag and DeParle Spin Insurance Reform Whopper

seminal.firedoglake.com